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Case Usage in Latin - Isolating a single word and translating in order to understand why we have cases and how it changes the structure of a singular noun in ten different ways

Case Usage in Latin - Isolating a single word and translating in order to understand why we have cases and how it changes the structure of a singular noun in ten different ways

Published 2 years, 4 months ago
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  1. Nominative (Subject)
  2. capr-a
  3. “The goat” (Comes at beginning of sentence)

  1. Genitive (Possessive Noun)
  2. Capr-ae (TAKE STEM FROM)
  3. “The goat’s” or
  4. “Of the goat”


  1. Dative (Indirect Object)
  2. caprae
  3. “to/for the goat”


  1. Accusative (Direct Object)
  2. capram
  3. “The goat” (comes after the verb)


  1. Ablative (Preposition-al Phrase)
  2. caprā
  3. “by, with, from, near, alongside the goat”

  1. Capra, -ae (f); 

  • A - Nominative Singular Form

  • Ae - Genitive Singular Form

  1. Identify the noun’s genitive singular form. (-ae)

  2. Remove the genitive singular ending to find the noun’s stem. (capr-)

  3. Add endings from the noun’s declension to decline it in a certain case and number.

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